Regarding Gnutella

“Gnutella” is, at present, the name for a protocol for distributed
file sharing, mostly used for music files. The name also sometimes
refers to the network itself, as well as the original Gnutella software.
The situation is quite confusing. For more on Gnutella's
origin and history, please refer to the Wikipedia article on
the subject.

In any case, the name was originally a word play on “GNU”
(the original developers planned to release their code under the GNU
GPL, and may have had in mind contributing it to the GNU project) and
“Nutella” (a candy bar that the original developers
enjoyed). However, neither the original software nor any of the
related current projects
are official GNU
packages. We have asked that the Gnutella developers change the
name to avoid confusion; perhaps that will happen in the future.

The Free Software Foundation is concerned with the freedom to copy and
change software; music is outside our scope. But there is a partial
similarity in the ethical issues of copying software and copying
recordings of music. Some articles in the
philosophy directory
relate to the issue of copying for things other than software. Some
of the other
people's articles we have links to are also relevant.

No matter what sort of published information is being shared, we urge
people to reject the assumption that some person or company has a
natural right to prohibit sharing and dictate exactly how the public
can use it. Even the US legal system nominally
rejects that
anti-social idea.